`adjust_upvar_deref` and friends are implemented so that they reuse
existing region so new region vars don't have to be generated.
Since now we don't have to generate region vars in `InferBorrowKind`,
creating a new capture info would be cheap and we can just use
`determine_capture_info`.
syn is updated so that let_else syntax can be used in fn with `#[instrument]` attribute.
`restrict_repr_packed_field_ref_capture` is changed to take place by value
since cloning is needed anyway.
Region info is completely unnecessary for upvar capture kind computation
and is only needed to create the final upvar tuple ty. Doing so makes
creation of UpvarCapture very cheap and expose further cleanup opportunity.
If the target we're generating code for is msvc, then we do two main
things differently: we generate type names in a C++ style instead of a
Rust style and we generate debuginfo for enums differently.
I've refactored the code so that there is one function
(`cpp_like_debuginfo`) which determines if we should use the C++ style
of naming types and other debuginfo generation or the regular Rust one.
Because MIPSr6 has many differences with previous MIPSr2 arch, the previous rlib metadata stripping code in `rustc_codegen_ssa` is only for MIPSr2/r3/r5 (which share the same elf e_flags).
This commit fixed this problem. It makes `rustc_codegen_ssa` happy when compiling rustc for MIPSr6 target or hosts.
RustWrapper: adapt to new AttributeMask API
Upstream LLVM change 9290ccc3c1a1 migrated attribute removal to use
AttributeMask instead of AttrBuilder, so we need to follow suit here.
r? ``@nagisa`` cc ``@nikic``
Exit nonzero on rustc -Wall
Previously `rustc -Wall /dev/null` would print a paragraph explaining that `-Wall` is not a thing in Rust, but would then exit 0. I believe exiting 0 is not the right behavior. For something like `rustc --version` or `rustc --help` or `rustc -C help` the user is requesting rustc to print some information; rustc prints that information and exits 0 because what the user requested has been accomplished. In the case of `rustc -Wall path/to/main.rs`, I don't find it correct to conceptualize this as "the user requested rustc to print information about the fact that Wall doesn't exist". The user requested a particular thing, and despite rustc knowing what they probably meant and informing them about that, the thing they requested has *not* been accomplished. Thus a nonzero exit code is needed.
Fix spacing and ordering of words in pretty printed Impl
Follow-up to #92238 fixing one of the FIXMEs.
```rust
macro_rules! repro {
($item:item) => {
stringify!($item)
};
}
fn main() {
println!("{}", repro!(impl<T> Struct<T> {}));
println!("{}", repro!(impl<T> const Trait for T {}));
}
```
Before: `impl <T> Struct<T> {}`
After: `impl<T> Struct<T> {}`
Before: `impl const <T> Trait for T {}` 😿
After: `impl<T> const Trait for T {}`
Delay remaining `span_bug`s in drop elaboration
This follows changes from #67967 and converts remaining `span_bug`s into
delayed bugs, since for const items drop elaboration might be executed
on a MIR which failed borrowck.
Fixes#81708.
Fixes#91816.
return the correct type for closures in `type_of`
A bit unhappy about the way `typeck::check_crate` works rn. Would have preferred to not change `CollectItemTypesVisitor` in this way.
r? ``@nikomatsakis``
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #92058 (Make Run button visible on hover)
- #92288 (Fix a pair of mistyped test cases in `std::net::ip`)
- #92349 (Fix rustdoc::private_doc_tests lint for public re-exported items)
- #92360 (Some cleanups around check_argument_types)
- #92389 (Regression test for borrowck ICE #92015)
- #92404 (Fix font size for [src] links in headers)
- #92443 (Rustdoc: resolve associated traits for non-generic primitive types)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Some cleanups around check_argument_types
Split out in ways from my rebase/continuation of #71827
Commits are mostly self-explanatory and these changes should be fairly straightforward
`thorin` is a Rust implementation of a DWARF packaging utility that
supports reading DWARF objects from archive files (i.e. rlibs) and
therefore is better suited for integration into rustc.
Signed-off-by: David Wood <david.wood@huawei.com>
In #79570, `-Z split-dwarf-kind={none,single,split}` was replaced by `-C
split-debuginfo={off,packed,unpacked}`. `-C split-debuginfo`'s packed
and unpacked aren't exact parallels to single and split, respectively.
On Unix, `-C split-debuginfo=packed` will put debuginfo into object
files and package debuginfo into a DWARF package file (`.dwp`) and
`-C split-debuginfo=unpacked` will put debuginfo into dwarf object files
and won't package it.
In the initial implementation of Split DWARF, split mode wrote sections
which did not require relocation into a DWARF object (`.dwo`) file which
was ignored by the linker and then packaged those DWARF objects into
DWARF packages (`.dwp`). In single mode, sections which did not require
relocation were written into object files but ignored by the linker and
were not packaged. However, both split and single modes could be
packaged or not, the primary difference in behaviour was where the
debuginfo sections that did not require link-time relocation were
written (in a DWARF object or the object file).
This commit re-introduces a `-Z split-dwarf-kind` flag, which can be
used to pick between split and single modes when `-C split-debuginfo` is
used to enable Split DWARF (either packed or unpacked).
Signed-off-by: David Wood <david.wood@huawei.com>
By avoiding formatting and allocations in the no-ident case, and by making the span mandatory if the ident exists.
Use the optimized `opt_item_ident` to cleanup `fn each_child_of_item`
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #92092 (Drop guards in slice sorting derive src pointers from &mut T, which is invalidated by interior mutation in comparison)
- #92388 (Fix a minor mistake in `String::try_reserve_exact` examples)
- #92442 (Add negative `impl` for `Ord`, `PartialOrd` on `LocalDefId`)
- #92483 (Stabilize `result_cloned` and `result_copied`)
- #92574 (Add RISC-V detection macro and more architecture instructions)
- #92575 (ast: Always keep a `NodeId` in `ast::Crate`)
- #92583 (⬆️ rust-analyzer)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Fixes#92266
In some `HashStable` impls, we use a cache to avoid re-computing
the same `Fingerprint` from the same structure (e.g. an `AdtDef`).
However, the `StableHashingContext` used can be configured to
perform hashing in different ways (e.g. skipping `Span`s). This
configuration information is not included in the cache key,
which will cause an incorrect `Fingerprint` to be used if
we hash the same structure with different `StableHashingContext`
settings.
To fix this, the configuration settings of `StableHashingContext`
are split out into a separate `HashingControls` struct. This
struct is used as part of the cache key, ensuring that our caches
always produce the correct result for the given settings.
With this in place, we now turn off `Span` hashing during the
entire process of computing the hash included in legacy symbols.
This current has no effect, but will matter when a future PR
starts hashing more `Span`s that we currently skip.
Extract init_env_logger to crate
I've been doing some work on rustc_ast_pretty using an out-of-tree main.rs and Cargo.toml with the following:
```toml
[dependencies]
rustc_ast = { path = "../rust/compiler/rustc_ast" }
rustc_ast_pretty = { path = "../rust/compiler/rustc_ast_pretty" }
rustc_span = { path = "../rust/compiler/rustc_span" }
```
Rustc_ast_pretty helpfully uses `tracing::debug!` but I found that in order to enable the debug output, my test crate must depend on rustc_driver which is an enormously bigger dependency than what I have been using so far, and slows down iteration time because an enormous dependency tree between rustc_ast and rustc_driver must now be rebuilt after every ast change.
I pulled out the tracing initialization to a new minimal rustc_log crate so that projects depending on the other rustc crates, like rustc_ast_pretty, can access the `debug!` messages in them without building all the rest of rustc.
Do not hash leading zero bytes of i64 numbers in Sip128 hasher
I was poking into the stable hasher, trying to improve its performance by compressing the number of hashed bytes. First I was experimenting with LEB128, but it was painful to implement because of the many assumptions that the SipHasher makes, so I tried something simpler - just ignoring leading zero bytes. For example, if an 8-byte integer can fit into a 4-byte integer, I will just hash the four bytes.
I wonder if this could produce any hashing ambiguity. Originally I thought so, but then I struggled to find any counter-example where this could cause different values to have the same hash. I'd be glad for any examples that could be broken by this (there are some ways of mitigating it if that would be the case). It could happen if you had e.g. 2x `u8` vs 1x `u16` hashed after one another in two different runs, but that can also happen now, without this "trick". And with collections, it should be fine, because the length is included in their hash.
I gathered some statistics for common values used in the `clap` benchmark. I observed that especially `i64` often had very low values, so I started with that type, let's see what perf does on CI.
There are some tradeoffs that we can try:
1) What types to use this optimization for? `u64`, `u32`, `u16`? Locally it was a slight loss for `u64`, I noticed that its values are often quite large.
2) What byte sizes to check? E.g. we can only distinguish between `u64`/`u32` or `u64`/`u8` instead of `u64`/`u32`/`u16`/`u8` to reduce branching (with `i64` it seemed to be better to go all the way down to `u8` locally though).
(The macro was introduced because I expect that I will be trying out this "trick" for different types).
Can you please schedule a perf. run? Thanks.
r? `@the8472`